Cryptic genetic adaptation despite high gene flow in a range-expanding
population
Abstract
Signals of natural selection can be quickly eroded in high gene-flow
systems, severely challenging efforts to understand how and when genetic
adaptation occurs in the ocean. This long-standing, unresolved topic in
ecology has renewed importance because rapidly changing environmental
conditions are driving range expansions that, in many cases, necessitate
rapid evolutionary responses. To test for genetic adaptation in a
coastal marine species with high dispersal potential, we performed a
series of crosses on Kellet’s whelk (Kelletia kelletii) collected from
its historical and recently colonized range, and conducted RNA-Seq on
offspring that we reared in a common garden environment. We identified
2,770 differentially expressed genes between 54 samples with
historical-range and expanded-range ancestry. Using SNPs called directly
from the differentially expressed genes, we revealed parental population
structure that enabled us to assign “unknown” samples back to their
range of origin with unprecedented accuracy for a marine species (92.6
to 94.5%). The SNP with the highest predictive importance occurred on
triosephosphate isomerase (TPI), an essential enzyme for glycolysis and
glucogenesis, which also plays a role in cold stress response. TPI is
both highly upregulated and contains a non-synonymous mutation in the
expanded range, where ocean temperatures are colder than in the
historical range. Our findings pave the way for accurately identifying
patterns of dispersal, gene flow, and population connectivity in the
ocean by demonstrating that rapid genetic adaptation can occur even in
high gene flow species and that experimental transcriptomics can reveal
mechanisms for how marine organisms respond to changing environmental
conditions.